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Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment VI
Son of the noble Fingal, Oscian,Prince of men! what tears run downthe cheeks of age? what shades thymighty soul?Memory, son of Alpin, memorywounds the aged. Of former times aremy thoughts; my thoughts are of thenoble Fingal. The race of the king returninto my mind, and wound me withremembrance.One day, returned from the sport ofthe mountains, from pursuing the sonsof the hill, we covered this heath withour youth. Fingal the mighty was here,and Oscur, my son, great in war. Fairon our sight from the sea, at once, avirgin came. Her breast was like thesnow of one night. Her cheek like thebud of the rose. Mild was her bluerolling eye: but sorrow was big in herheart.Fingal renowned in war! she cries,
James Macpherson
The Lady's Rock
A brother's eye had seen the griefThat Duart's lady bore;His boat with sail half-raised flies downThe sound by green Lismore.Ahaladah, Ahaladah!Why speeds your boat so fast?No scene of joy shall light your trackAdown the spray-strewn blast.The very trees upon the isleRock to and fro, and wail;The very birds cry sad and shrill,Storm driven, where you sail;O when for yon dim mainland shoreYou launched your keel to startYou knew not of the load 'twill bear,The heavier load your heart.See what is that, which yonder gleams,Where skarts alone make home;Is that but one oft-breaking sea,Some frequent fount of foam?The morn is dark and indistinct,Is all through drift and cloud;Around the rock white waters ...
John Campbell
Epilogue
If Luther's day expand to Darwin's year,Shall that exclude the hope--foreclose the fear?Unmoved by all the claims our times avow,The ancient Sphinx still keeps the porch of shade;And comes Despair, whom not her calm may cow,And coldly on that adamantine browScrawls undeterred his bitter pasquinade.But Faith (who from the scrawl indignant turns)With blood warm oozing from her wounded trust,Inscribes even on her shards of broken urnsThe sign o' the cross--the spirit above the dust!Yea, ape and angel, strife and old debate--The harps of heaven and dreary gongs of hell;Science the feud can only aggravate--No umpire she betwixt the chimes and knell:The running battle of the star and clodShall run forever--if there be...
Herman Melville
Satia te Sanguine
If you loved me ever so little,I could bear the bonds that gall,I could dream the bonds were brittle;You do not love me at all.O beautiful lips, O bosomMore white than the moons and warm,A sterile, a ruinous blossomIs blown your way in a storm.As the lost white feverish limbsOf the Lesbian Sappho, adriftIn foam where the sea-weed swims,Swam loose for the streams to lift,My heart swims blind in a seaThat stuns me; swims to and fro,And gathers to windward and leeLamentation, and mourning, and woe.A broken, an emptied boat,Sea saps it, winds blow apart,Sick and adrift and afloat,The barren waif of a heart.Where, when the gods would be cruel,Do they go for a torture? wherePlant thor...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Young That Died In Beauty
If souls should only sheen so brightIn heaven as in ethly light,An nothen better wer the cease,How comely still, in sheape an feace,Would many reach thik happy pleace,The hopevul souls that in their primeHa seemd atook avore their time,The young that died in beauty.But when woones lims ha lost their strangthAtweilen drough a lifetimes langth,An over cheaks a-growen woldThe slowly-weasten years ha rolldThe deepnen wrinkles hollow vwold;When life is ripe, then death do callVor less ov thought, than when do vallOn young voks in their beauty.But pinen souls, wi heads a-hungIn heavy sorrow vor the young,The sister ov the brother dead,The father wi a child avled,The husband when his bride ha la...
William Barnes
Vpon The Three Sonnes Of The Lord Sheffield, Drowned In Hvmber
Light Sonnets hence, and to loose Louers flie,And mournfull Maydens sing an ElegieOn those three SHEFFIELDS, ouer-whelm'd with waues,Whose losse the teares of all the Muses craues;A thing so full of pitty as this was,Me thinkes for nothing should not slightly passe.Treble this losse was, why should it not borrowe,Through this Iles treble parts, a treble sorrowe:But Fate did this, to let the world to knowe,That sorrowes which from common causes growe,Are not worth mourning for, the losse to beare,But of one onely sonne, 's not worth one teare.Some tender-hearted man, as I, may spendSome drops (perhaps) for a deceased friend.Some men (perhaps) their Wifes late death may rue;Or Wifes their Husbands, but such be but fewe.Cares that haue vs'd th...
Michael Drayton
Doubt And Prayer
Tho Sin too oft, when smitten by Thy rod,Rail at Blind Fate with many a vain AlasFrom sin thro sorrow into Thee we passBy that same path our true forefathers trod;And let not Reason fail me, nor the sodDraw from my death Thy living flower and grass,Before I learn that Love, which is, and wasMy Father, and my Brother, and my God!Steel me with patience! soften me with grief!Let blow the trumpet strongly while I pray,Till this embattled wall of unbeliefMy prison, not my fortress, fall away!Then, if Thou willest, let my day be brief,So Thou wilt strike Thy glory thro the day.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
To A Gipsy Child By The Sea-Shore
Douglas, Isle of ManWho taught this pleading to unpractisd eyes?Who hid such import in an infants gloom?Who lent thee, child, this meditative guise?What clouds thy forehead, and fore-dates thy doom?Lo! sails that gleam a moment and are gone;The swinging waters, and the clusterd pier.Not idly Earth and Ocean labour on,Nor idly do these sea-birds hover near.But thou, whom superfluity of joyWafts not from thine own thoughts, nor longings vain,Nor weariness, the full-fed souls annoy;Remaining in thy hunger and thy pain:Thou, drugging pain by patience; half averseFrom thine own mothers breast, that knows not thee;With eyes that sought thine eyes thou didst converse,And that soul-searching vision fell on me.<...
Matthew Arnold
What Shall I Think?...
What shall I think when I come to die, if only I am in a condition to think anything then?Shall I think how little use I have made of my life, how I have slumbered, dozed through it, how little I have known how to enjoy its gifts?'What? is this death? So soon? Impossible! Why, I have had no time to do anything yet.... I have only been making ready to begin!'Shall I recall the past, and dwell in thought on the few bright moments I have lived through - on precious images and faces?Will my ill deeds come back to my mind, and will my soul be stung by the burning pain of remorse too late?Shall I think of what awaits me beyond the grave ... and in truth does anything await me there?No.... I fancy I shall try not to think, and shall force myself to take interest in some trif...
Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev
Despondency.
Not all the bravery that day puts onOf gold and azure, ardent or austere,Shall ease my soul of sorrow; grown more dearThan all the joy that heavenly hope may don.Far up the skies the rumor of the dawnMay run, and eve like some wild torch appear;These shall not change the darkness, gathered here,Of thought, that rusts like an old sword undrawn.Oh, for a place deep-sunken from the sun!A wildwood cave of primitive rocks and moss!Where Sleep and Silence, breast to married breastLie with their child, night-eyed Oblivion;Where, freed from all the trouble of my cross,I might forget, I might forget, and rest!
Madison Julius Cawein
Queen Victoria.
1837. The sunshine streaming through the stainèd glass Touched her with rosy colors as she stood, The maiden Queen of all the British realm, In the old Abbey on that soft June day. Youth shone within her eyes, where God had set All steadfastness, and high resolve, and truth; Youth flushed her cheek, dwelt on the smooth white brow Whereon the heavy golden circlet lay. The ashes of dead kings, the history of A nation's growth, of strife, and victory, The mighty past called soft through aisle and nave: "Be strong, O Queen; be strong as thou art fair!" A virgin, white of soul and unafraid, Since back of her was God, and at her feet A people loyal to the core, and strong, And loving w...
Jean Blewett
The Old Woman
I was walking over a wide plain alone.And suddenly I fancied light, cautious footsteps behind my back.... Some one was walking after me.I looked round, and saw a little, bent old woman, all muffled up in grey rags. The face of the old woman alone peeped out from them; a yellow, wrinkled, sharp-nosed, toothless face.I went up to her.... She stopped.'Who are you? What do you want? Are you a beggar? Do you seek alms?'The old woman did not answer. I bent down to her, and noticed that both her eyes were covered with a half-transparent membrane or skin, such as is seen in some birds; they protect their eyes with it from dazzling light.But in the old woman, the membrane did not move nor uncover the eyes ... from which I concluded she was blind.'Do you want alms?'...
Sonnet CCXXIV.
Cara la vita, e dopo lei mi pare.HONOUR TO BE PREFERRED TO LIFE. Methinks that life in lovely woman first,And after life true honour should be dear;Nay, wanting honour--of all wants the worst--Friend! nought remains of loved or lovely here.And who, alas! has honour's barrier burst,Unsex'd and dead, though fair she yet appear,Leads a vile life, in shame and torment curst,A lingering death, where all is dark and drear.To me no marvel was Lucretia's end,Save that she needed, when that last disgraceAlone sufficed to kill, a sword to die.Sophists in vain the contrary defend:Their arguments are feeble all and base,And truth alone triumphant mounts on high!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Gone.
The night is dark, and evermore The thick drops patter on the pane The wind is weary of the rain,And round the thatches moaneth sore; Dark is the night, and cold the air; And all the trees stand stark and bare,With leaves spread dank and sere below, Slow rotting on the plashy clay, In the God's-acre far away,Where she, O God! lies cold below-- Cold, cold below!And many a bitter day and night Have pour'd their storms upon her breast, And chill'd her in her long, long rest,With foul corruption's icy blight; Earth's dews are freezing round the heart, Where love alone so late had part;And evermore the frost and snow Are burrowing downward through the clay, In the God's-acre far away...
Walter R. Cassels
Tristram of Lyonesse - IV - The Maiden Marriage
Spring watched her last moon burn and fade with MayWhile the days deepened toward a bridal day.And on her snowbright hand the ring was setWhile in the maidens ear the songs word yetHovered, that hailed as loves own queen by nameIseult: and in her heart the word was flame;A pulse of light, a breath of tender fire,Too dear for doubt, too driftless for desire.Between her fathers hand and brothers ledFrom hall to shrine, from shrine to marriage-bed,She saw not how by hap at home-comingFell from her new lords hand a royal ring,Whereon he looked, and felt the pulse astartSpeak passion in his faith-forsaken heart.For this was given him of the hand whereinThat hearts pledge lay for ever: so the sinThat should be done if truly he should take
A Reminiscence
The rose to the wind has yielded: all its leavesLie strewn on the graveyard grass, and all their lightAnd colour and fragrance leave our sense and sightBereft as a man whom bitter time bereavesOf blossom at once and hope of garnered sheaves,Of April at once and August. Day to nightCalls wailing, and life to death, and depth to height,And soul upon soul of man that hears and grieves.Who knows, though he see the snow-cold blossom shed,If haply the heart that burned within the rose,The spirit in sense, the life of life be dead?If haply the wind that slays with storming snowsBe one with the wind that quickens? Bow thine head,O Sorrow, and commune with thine heart: who knows?
Sonnet: - II.
'Tis summer still, yet now and then a leafFalls from some stately tree. True type of life!How emblamatic of the pangs that griefWrings from our blighted hopes, that one by oneDrop from us in our wrestle with the strifeAnd natural passions of our stately youth.And thus we fall beneath life's summer sun.Each step conducts us through an opening doorInto new halls of being, hand in handWith grave Experience, until we commandThe open, wide-spread autumn fields, and storeThe full ripe grain of Wisdom and of Truth.As on life's tott'ring precipice we stand,Our sins like withered leaves are blown about the land.
Charles Sangster
There Is A Bondage Worse, Far Worse, To Bear
There is a bondage worse, far worse, to bearThan his who breathes, by roof, and floor, and wall,Pent in, a Tyrant's solitary Thrall:'Tis his who walks about in the open air,One of a Nation who, henceforth, must wearTheir fetters in their souls. For who could be,Who, even the best, in such condition, freeFrom self-reproach, reproach that he must shareWith Human-nature? Never be it oursTo see the sun how brightly it will shine,And know that noble feelings, manly powers,Instead of gathering strength, must droop and pine;And earth with all her pleasant fruits and flowersFade, and participate in man's decline.
William Wordsworth